Adirondack Daily Enterprise, May 19, 1954
The last line reads
"Recommended by Gourmet Guide to Good Eating"
Tupper Lake Free Press and Herald,
October 13, 1938
Indian Spring Camp was owned by Karl Eklund and operated by his wife Gerda from the 1930s.  Karl died in 1951, and Gerda Eklund kept the camp going through 1962. Mrs. Eklund died at the camp in 1964.


Tupper Lake Free Press, September 14, 1933

 [illegible word] Carl J. Eklund and daughter Madeline, of Coreys, N.Y. motored to New York City Sunday morning accompanied by Mr. Jerry Doyle. Mrs. Eklund and Madeline have spent the past two months at Indian Spring Camp at Coreys.


Tupper Lake Free Press, June 4, 1936

Mrs. Karl Eklund of New York City recently arrived in town and opened the Indian Spring Camps at Coreys for the camper and tourist trade. The site is historical in the Adirondacks near the famous Indian Carry and Bartlett Inn Carry and hotel at the foot of Upper Saranac Lake, and the former site of “Rustic Lodge,” well-known resort of 75 years and more ago. Mrs. Ecklund [sic] was accompanied by Mr. and Mrs. Charles Myers of New York City and Mrs. S. P. Barclay of Flushing. L.I.


Tupper Lake Free Press, September 10, 1936

Karl Ecklund, [sic] of Milwaukee, Wis., and Miss Madeline Ecklund, of New Jersey, have returned to their homes after a summer vacation at the Indian Springs camps at Coreys in the Upper Saranac Lake sector.


Tupper Lake Free Press, January 26, 1950

Mr. and Mrs. Karl Eklund of Indian Spring Camp, Coreys, are [spending] the winter with their son, Carl Eklund, at Newport Beach, California.


Tupper Lake Free Press and Herald, May 10, 1951

Mrs. Karl Eklud arrived Friday from Little Neck, L.I., to open Indian Spring Camp at Coreys for the season.


Tupper Lake Free Press and Herald, November 8, 1951

Lucky 13 Club Has Dinner-Meeting at Indian Spring Camp

The Lucky 13 Club held its October meeting, a dinner-party, at Indian Spring Camp, Coreys.

Plans were laid for the coming year's activities, and the third Tuesday of each month was set aside for meeting night. Thirteen members attended and enjoyed an excellent dinner served by the hostess, Mrs. Karl Eklund. The November meeting will be held Tuesday, Nov. 20, at the home of Mrs. Kathryn Burke, with Mrs. Lois Brousseau and Mrs. Valeda Burke as co-hostesses.


Tupper Lake Free Press and Herald, May 5, 1955

Mrs. Gerda Eklund, who spent the winter at Little Neck, L. I. , has arrived to reopen Indian Spring Camp at Coreys for the season.


Tupper Lake Free Press and Herald, August 16, 1956

Corey's News Notes

Gerda Eklund of Indian Spring Camp won two first prizes at the recent Lake Placid Flower Show, taking one award for a specimen black pansy and another for an arrangement of delphiniums and French anemones called “Adirondack Dawn”. The flowers were from the garden of Edward Meyers, Coreys.

Among recent guests at Indian Spring Camp were Mr. and Mrs. Carlos Viescaera. Mr. Viescaera is the Peruvian vice consul in New York.

Madeline Bernard, daughter of Mrs. Eklund, is one of the painters having a one-man show at the Happy Manor Art Gallery on Bloomingdale Road, Saranac Lake.

Marian Carol Kauffman and Terry Southern, the avant guard writer, recent vacationer at Indian Spring Camp, were married in Tupper Lake on July 14. The ceremony was performed by Justice Albert J. von Scheidt.


Tupper Lake Free Press and Herald, October 22, 1959

Mrs. Gerda Eklund has closed Indian Spring Camp at Coreys for the season and left Sunday to visit her daughter at Little Neck, L.I. She will spend the winter with her son, Carl Eklund, at West Covina, Calif.